YouTube Music: Everything you need to know

Publish date: 2023-02-13

YouTube is one of the most-viewed websites on the planet, and by far the most popular video platform today, so it's no surprise that millions upon millions of users turn to it every day for music. It's the default platform for viral music videos and hosts just about any song, remix, mashup, or fan cover you could ever want. Whether you're looking for lyrics to a song before karaoke night, music to sleep to, or a new remix to play at your next party, YouTube has what you're looking for.

A half-hearted experiment when it debuted in 2015, YouTube Music remained an utter mess when it relaunched in 2018, riddled with bugs and missing key features. Since then, Google has continued to update and refine the service, finally making it worth using in recent years. So it's no surprise that YouTube Music is the fastest-growing music streaming app today, even if its 50 million subscribers still sit behind Spotify and Apple Music.

While it has an ad-supported free tier, YouTube Music Premium lets you download for offline listening or play music with the screen off, making it the best option. It's one of the best music streaming services in 2022, but does its unique interface, unparalleled content library, and improved algorithms and playlists justify subscribing to it instead of its competitors? We'll help you decide.

Music reimagined

YouTube Music

Google's video-centric streaming service is worth a look.
Unlike Spotify, Apple Music, and other competitors, YouTube Music is a streaming platform that gives you easy access to official song audio and videos in one single place. It's free to use, but paying for the Premium version gives you a much more powerful experience with a host of additional features.

Which YouTube Music membership should you get?

YouTube Music is built on a gold mine. YouTube is not only the most used video platform in the world; it might be the biggest catalog of professional, semi-professional, and amateur music available in the world.

But there's no sugar-coating it: using YouTube Music as a free user on Android is bad. There are ads every three to six songs and you don't get access to all of its features. So you'll want to pay for it, or not use it at all.

You have three main options for YouTube Music Premium: a $5/month option for students, $10/month for a standard individual plan, or $15/month for a family plan with up to five users. In most cases, all of these prices match the industry standard, so you aren't paying more than usual. If you prefer to pay annually, you can pay $100/year for an individual plan.

Honestly, we don't recommend you subscribe to any of these. Why? Because for just $2/month or $20/year more, you can get YouTube Premium instead. That's $7/month, $12/month, or $17/month for students, individuals, or 5-person families, respectively.

For that slight increase, you get ad-free and offline viewing for YouTube plus YouTube Music. Two services for slightly more than the price of one.

Getting started with YouTube Music

YouTube Music is an adjustment from traditional music services — especially because it's based around video as well as audio — but thanks to the Google's search prowess and downright uncanny predictions and recommendations, getting used to Google's music service should be as painless as possible. For starters, we have a simple guide on getting started with YouTube Music that'll cover all the basics.

If you have your own extensive digital music library, you can upload your music library to YouTube Music and get access to songs no other service may offer. You can upload up to 100,000 FLAC, M4A, MP3, OGG, and WMA songs. You can then download music for offline playback on your phone, tablet, computer, watch, or other compatible device.

Or, if you had music on the now-defunct Google Play Music, you can transfer your Google Play Music library to YouTube Music. You'll transfer your music recommendations, playlists, radio stations, likes and dislikes, uploads, and library songs.

Whatever its origin, once you've made your library available, you can then download music for offline playing on other devices. That'll ensure you can enjoy your library while in airplane mode or anywhere without consistent internet or signal.

YouTube Music is available on more devices than you'd expect. If you want to use YouTube Music on a Wear OS watch, that's finally an option. You can even enable it on Google Maps while you drive using Android Auto.

You may also want to hide your YouTube likes from YouTube Music. This ensures that "liking" a song from the radio doesn't mean your regular YouTube feed will become littered with recommendations for that artist. And there are plenty of other ways to improve your YouTube Music recommendations if you know how.

How does it compare to other services?

YouTube Music is bringing a lot to the table, but it's far from the only music streaming service in town.

If you weigh YouTube Music vs. Spotify, Spotify has some serious perks in its favor. YouTube Music lacks Spotify's podcast selection and maxes out at 256kbps, whereas Spotify's 70 million songs can hit 320kbps. Both work on the same list of devices, but Spotify adds in a desktop audio option that many people prefer to browser-based. Either individual plan lets you log in on as many devices as you want, though only YouTube Music has unlimited offline downloads (Spotify cuts you off at five devices). Spotify's algorithms for song recs are considered the best in the business, but YouTube Music has gotten dramatically better recently.

If price is most important to you, you may pick Amazon Music Unlimited over YouTube Music because its individual plan costs just $8/month or $79/year. Prime Student members pay just $1/month, or anyone can pay $4/month if you want music on just one device. Or you can even get a free Prime subscription if you can downgrade from 75 million to 2 million songs. Really, this pick will depend on whether you prefer Google Assistant and Wear OS or Alexa speakers, since Amazon works best with the latter.

If you're an iPhone owner, you may wonder whether Apple Music or YouTube Music fits your needs best. Apple Music now boasts 90 million songs, also lets you upload your library to the cloud, offers music videos like YouTube does, and has respected recommendations and playlists. It has no free tier, and its UI isn't great, but that isn't necessarily a strong point for YouTube Music either. Again, this option is better suited for iOS users, even if there's an Apple Music Android app.

Where is YouTube Music available?

If you're interested in checking out YouTube Music, the service is currently available in 95 countries as of early 2022, listed below:

What's the latest with YouTube Music in 2022?

Google didn't add personalized mixes like Spotify and other rivals until late 2020, so it spent much of 2021 improving its algorithms and recommendations to catch up.

Last year, YouTube Music added related playlists to the bottom of your curated lists, with recs from both Google and other listeners based on your interests. New mood filters like "Energize" give you unique mixes based on what kind of vibe you're going for. And YouTube released its first Year in Review summary for listeners at the end of last year.

Going into 2022, it looks like more tweaks and improvements will come our way soon. Most recently, Google added supervised YouTube Music accounts for kids, so your recs will no longer get destroyed by their adorable tastes.

Otherwise, we're looking forward to Google adding more songs and improving its recommendations even further as we progress into 2022.

Music reimagined

YouTube Music

Google's video-centric streaming service is worth a look.
Unlike Spotify, Apple Music, and other competitors, YouTube Music is a streaming platform that gives you easy access to official song audio and videos in one single place. It's free to use, but paying for the Premium version gives you a much more powerful experience with a host of additional features.

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